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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
AUGUST 28, 2003
8:43 AM
CONTACT:  OMB Watch
Rick Blum or Sean Moulton 202-234-8494
Groups Demand Public Voice On Rules that Could Restrict Access to Public Information Deemed "Sensitive"

 
WASHINGTON - August 28 - Seventy-five organizations representing journalists, scientists, librarians, environmental groups, privacy advocates, and others today sent a letter to Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge calling on the Department of Homeland Security to allow public input on procedures for "safeguarding" and sharing a vaguely defined set of information between firefighters, police officers, public health researchers and federal, state, and local governments.

Under the auspices of fighting terrorism, the Department is poised to write - without guarantees for public input - procedures that could sweep up otherwise publicly available information that has nothing to do with terrorism into a zone of secrecy while subjecting millions of Americans to confidentiality agreements.

The letter asks Secretary Ridge to release to the public a draft version of the new procedures - which would not themselves contain classified information - and address public comments in writing a final version. The letter expresses concern that the procedures may cut a broad swath of information out of the public domain, that the procedures would subject millions inside and outside of government to nondisclosure agreements and criminal penalties for disclosing information improperly, and cut out the ability of journalists, community groups, and others to inform the public of activities of federal, state and local governments.

The law that created the Department, the Homeland Security Act, included a provision that required the federal government to safeguard and share "homeland security information" with government officials, public health professionals, firefighters and others in order to respond to a terrorist attack.

Included in that set of information is a potentially broad set of information, such as maps of environmental contamination, that is not classified but which may be perceived as helpful to a terrorist or potentially helpful in responding to or preventing an unknown future attack.

August 27, 2003

The Honorable Tom Ridge, Secretary

U.S. Department of Homeland Security

Washington, D.C. 20528

Dear Mr. Secretary:

We are writing to urge the Department of Homeland Security to give the public an opportunity to comment on procedures that are being developed that may restrict the public dissemination of "homeland security information," including information that is "sensitive but unclassified."

These procedures are being developed to implement the Homeland Security Information Sharing Act (HSISA). The Act was passed into law as Section VIII of the Homeland Security Act of 2002 with the purpose of fostering the sharing of information among federal, state, and local officials about possible terrorism activities.

The public's ability to remain informed of and participate in the decision-making of government is fundamental to the democratic process. Democracy is undermined whenever openness is compromised. Consistent with these democratic principles, those compromises, when they are made, should be made only when necessary and only after an open process in which the public participates.

Public comment on the procedures implementing the Act is warranted for several reasons. First, the definition of Homeland Security Information (HSI) included in HSISA is so broad that it raises the question whether activities of government officials and the public that have little to do with terrorism could be harmed by these implementing regulations. In particular, Section 892(f)(1) of HSISA defines homeland security information to include information that (A) relates to the threat of a terrorist activity, (B) relates to the ability to prevent, interdict, or disrupt terrorist activity, (C) would improve the identification or investigation of a suspected terrorist or terrorist organization, or would (D) improve the response to a terrorist act.

What remains unclear until implementing regulations are written and released is whether these procedures would preclude public access to information that community residents, parents, journalists and others in the public currently obtain from or with the assistance of government in order to make their communities safer, inform the public, and for other purposes. Equally unclear is whether these procedures will require government to remove information already publicly available. The public should have an opportunity to address that question in a public notice-and-comment rulemaking and government policymakers should consider those answers in formulating the information sharing procedures.

Second, public comment is warranted because the procedures developed under HSISA could directly affect a large number of people both inside and outside of the federal government. The HSISA would prohibit public disclosure of information subject to agreements between the government and those receiving "sensitive but unclassified" information. One recent analysis estimates that roughly four million people - including public health officials not employed by government at any level - could be asked under the requirements of HSISA to sign formal nondisclosure agreements. Those agreements would be enforceable through civil and criminal sanctions. In addition, the procedures implementing the Act could expand the list of those subject to these agreements even further.

Third, the public has an interest in being informed of new procedures for sharing information that may infringe on the public's ability to obtain information from government about its activities. Since the procedures that are to be created will directly address the "safeguarding" of information and restrictions on public dissemination of information, the public should have the opportunity to review a draft version of these implementing procedures, analyze their adequacy and potential impact, and make recommendations for improvements, as necessary.

The Homeland Security Information Sharing Act was passed into law with little public review and scrutiny and, thus, the impacts of the procedures that are to be developed to implement the Homeland Security Information Sharing Act are unknown. Since its passage, though, the law has attracted increased attention outside the government. We ask that the Department of Homeland Security provide the public with a period of sufficient length (i.e., 90 days) to review and comment upon a draft version of the procedures before they are finalized.

Please contact Rick Blum at OMB Watch by email at blumr@ombwatch.org or by phone at 202-234-8494 in regards to this letter. We look forward to hearing from you.

Sincerely,

American Association of Law Libraries

American Library Association

American Society of Business Publication Editors

American Society of Magazine Editors

American Society of Newspaper Editors

Asian American Journalists Association

Associated Press Managing Editors

Association of Capitol Reporters and Editors

Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication

Association of Health Care Journalists

Association of Research Libraries

Calhoun County (Texas) Resource Watch Center for Democracy and Technology

Chicago Association of Law Librarians

Children's Environmental Health Network

Citizens' Environmental Coalition (New York)

College Media Advisers

Committee of Concerned Journalists

Common Cause

Criminal Justice Journalists

Department for Professional Employees,

AFL-CIO

The Education Writers Association

Electronic Privacy Information Center

Environmental Defense

Federation of American Scientists

Freedom of Information Center,

University of Missouri School of Journalism

Good Neighbor Committee of South Cook County (Illinois)

Government Accountability

Project HealthLink

Journalism Education Association

Journalism and Women's Symposium

Law Librarians Association of Wisconsin

Law Librarians of New England- Executive Board

Magazine Publishers of America

Mid-America Association of Law Librarians

Military Reporters & Editors

Montana Coalition for Health, Environmental & Economic Rights

National Association of Black Journalists

National Association of Hispanic Journalists

National Association of Science Writers

National Environmental Trust

National Federation of Press Women

National Press Foundation

National Press Photographers Association

National Security Archive

National Society of Newspaper Columnists

New Mexico Foundation for Open Government

Newspaper Association of America

The Newspaper Guild-CWA

Ohio Regional Association of Law Librarians

Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition

OMB Watch

Online News Association

Oregon Toxics Alliance

People For the American Way Foundation

Project On Government Oversight

Protect All Children's Environment

Radio-Television News Directors Association

Refinery Reform Campaign

The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press

The Silha Center for the Study of Media Ethics and Law (Minnesota)

Society of Environmental Journalists

Society of Professional Journalists

Society for News Design

South Carolina Library Association

South Florida Association of Law Libraries

Southern California Association of Law Libraries

Southern New England Law Librarians Association

Sustainable Energy and Economic Development (SEED) Coalition (Texas)

UNITY: Journalists of Color, Inc.

Valley Watch, Inc. (Indiana)

Wasatch Clean Air Coalition (Utah)

Western Pacific Chapter of the American Association of Law Libraries

Western Pennsylvania Law Library Association

Working Group on Community Right to Know

cc: Condoleeza Rice, National Security Advisor

Joshua Bolten, Director, Office of Management and Budget

John Ashcroft, Attorney General, Department of Justice

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